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Princecon III Fantasy Game? Is it dangerous, criminal?

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SmileMaker Donating Member (346 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-05-05 05:05 PM
Original message
Princecon III Fantasy Game? Is it dangerous, criminal?
Grad student was removed from campus for criminal activity. I'm wondering how worried I should be.

--------------
The Department of Public Safety is alerting members of the campus community to an ongoing criminal investigation related to a
graduate student, Michael Lohman, who was arrested March 30 by Princeton Borough police on charges of reckless endangerment
of another person, tampering with a food product, theft and harassment in connection with incidents involving drink tampering and
cutting of women's hair. The student is not on campus and is currently barred from returning.

The student was under investigation by campus and local police as a suspect in a small number of on-campus incidents prior to his
arrest. The scope of the investigation has widened since his arrest, following his confession of involvement in dozens of incidents.
---------

I did some googling with the student's name to see what might have gotten him involved in the wierd crimes. I found this game. He was grad student in the math dept. The ast time they got together to play was the weekend of 3/11/05.

http://www.princetongames.org/princecon/about.php3

Using the unique PrinceCon role-playing system (similar to Dungeons & Dragons), players are transported into vast inter-connected worlds of excitement and intrigue, all the while struggling to topple evil emperors, drive back invading hordes, piece together ancient mysteries and above all else, survive a weekend of non-stop gaming!

Each year, our valiant -- or occasionally monstrous -- heroes face a new challenge. Recent themes have included:

PrinceCon 29: The Tree of Life (MonsterCon)
Ransack, pillage and burn your way through the world on your quest to destroy the tree of life and overthrow the races of good.
PrinceCon 28: Horde of the Kings
Adventure in a world overrun with evil to reunite a lost king and the treasures that will help him lead his people out of darkness.
PrinceCon 27: The Curse of Winter
Spring is here and every day grows colder. Find the source of the bitter chill and turn it back before Pangaea slips into another Ice Age.
PrinceCon 26: Barbarians at the Gate
The barbarians are coming, and they just won't die. Decipher the secret of the gestalt and drive back the horde before every Lentrian city is destroyed.
Click here for more PrinceCon history






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htuttle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-05-05 05:10 PM
Response to Original message
1. What does sitting around a table rolling dice with a bunch of nerds...
...have to do with cutting women's hair and tampering with drinks and food products?

You've lost me here...

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SmileMaker Donating Member (346 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-05-05 05:39 PM
Response to Reply #1
4. This description gave me a particular case of the creeps...
http://www.princetongames.org/princecon/index.php3

Last year, they swept across the Great Wheel of our world, creatures such as a nightmare might invent. They came into our sacred cities, enslaved our children and mutilated the Tree of Life. We were unprepared and now pay the price for our foolishness.

Yet, this darkness cannot last forever! Today's slave pits boil with vengeful intent, our people whisper among themselves and the roots of freedom dig deeper each day. The remaining good races look on the genocide of our fey brethren as both warning and last hope. All beings have a point of genesis and these beasts of our horror stories are no exception.

It is only a matter of time before our overlords decide to finish the rest of us off. We must reach their corrupt forest first, wipe them out and reclaim our homeland.

Yep, it's that time again. Join us for the 30th annual Princecon fantasy role-playing marathon and help win back a world overrun by evil.

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MetaTrope Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-05-05 05:23 PM
Response to Original message
2. LOL, it's not the Dungeons & Dragons
It's the BACKGAMMON!
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htuttle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-05-05 06:08 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. Backgammon is the Devil's game!
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SouthernDem2004 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-05-05 05:31 PM
Response to Original message
3. The man has issues. Nothing to do with any hobbies.
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MetaTrope Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-05-05 07:31 PM
Response to Original message
6. I thought maybe we'd finally found a liberal perv here
to match all the conservatives that have been showing up as pedophiles, or mass murderers, or soliciting male cops in public parks, or whatever.

But looking at Lohman's favorite games, there's a distinct tilt towards the like of Monopoly, Nuclear War, and Axis & Allies, all neoconservative wet dreams.

The REAL capper, though, is that he gives a low rating to the classic card game illuminati, which is a full-tilt mockery of everything Free Republic stands for. So yes...IMHO, this is yet another Young Republican Loon.
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SmileMaker Donating Member (346 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Apr-06-05 02:07 PM
Response to Original message
7. More details - thanks for your help gamers!
http://www.dailyprincetonian.com/

The DailyPrincetonian.com webserver experienced hard-drive failure this evening. We appreciate your patience as we work to restore our
site. Below is today's top story.

Thanks, Daily Princetonian Web Staff

Graduate student arrested

Mathematics student admits to about 60 incidents of lewd behavior toward Asian females on campus
By Chanakya Sethi

Princetonian Senior Writer

A graduate student in the mathematics department has been charged by Borough police with reckless endangerment and harassment in
connection with more than 60 incidents targeting Asian women on campus. President Tilghman has barred the student from campus.
Michael Lohman, a third-year student in the applied and computational mathematics program, was charged last week by Borough police
with two counts of reckless endangerment, two counts of tampering with a food product, one count of harassment and one count of theft.
Lohman, 28, cut and took locks of hair from about nine Asian female University students without their knowledge or consent and poured
his own bodily fluids into the drinks of Asian female students more than 50 times, according to police reports.
Lohman lives in the Butler apartments with his wife of four years, who is Asian, a graduate student who knows him told The Daily
Princetonian Tuesday.
The investigation began on March 3 when an Asian female student riding a campus Green Line shuttle bus on Washington Road reported to
the Department of Public Safety (DPS) that an unidentified man had cut off a lock of her hair, University and Borough officials said.
Public Safety officials believed the incident was related to others dating back several years, DPS deputy director Charles Davall said
Tuesday. The department had received three reports - in October 2002, April 2003 and May 2004 - of an unidentified man pouring
substances into the drinks of Asian female students.
Those incidents occurred in the Graduate College dining hall serving line and in the Fine Hall library when the women's drinks were left
unattended, Davall said.
A joint investigation between DPS and Borough police revealed that Lohman was on the Green Line shuttle when the female student's hair
was snipped. In January, a witness from one of the earlier drink incidents identified Lohman in a photograph as the man who had poured an
unknown substance into a woman's drink in April 2003, Davall said.
Upon interrogation, Lohman confessed to cutting the woman's hair and to cutting the hair of Asian female students at least eight other times,
University communications director Lauren Robinson-Brown '85 said. All of the hair-snipping incidents occurred on campus, Davall said.
Lohman also admitted to pouring his bodily fluids into the drinks of Asian female students on more than 50 occasions, Robinson-Brown
said. The fluids poured into the drinks were semen and urine, Lt. Dennis McManimon, the Borough police's spokesman, said in an
interview Tuesday.
"In my 23 years in the department, this is clearly the most bizarre case that I've seen," McManimon said.
The Graduate College drink incidents in 2002 and 2003 occurred while Lohman was living there. Since the fall of 2003, however, Lohman
has neither held a meal plan nor worked at the Graduate College dining hall, a graduate student who knows him and University officials
said.
Borough police also reported that Lohman may have squirted bodily fluids on Asian female students as they rode on University shuttle
buses.
A search of Lohman's apartment revealed "a quantity of women's panties and numerous mittens," according to a statement from Borough
police.
The investigation, McManimon said, "has been leaning" toward the conclusion that Lohman stuffed the mittens with the hair he had obtained
from students and used them for personal sexual gratification.
The full extent of Lohman's activity may not be known for some time, University and Borough officials cautioned. "The investigation is far
from over. It's in its infancy," McManimon said.
Barred from campus

<snip>

By the end of the day on Tuesday, the Borough police had received "at least a dozen" phone messages regarding the case, McManimon
said, though he was not certain that all calls were from alleged victims.

Mental health questions

Borough police reported that Lohman was taken to Capital Health Systems, a hospital in nearby Trenton, after being arrested. Davall, the deputy director of DPS, said he could not say "whether is still there or why he was hospitalized."

It remains unclear whether Lohman suffers from a mental illness.
An e-mail message sent on Monday to students enrolled in MAT 308: Theory of Games, the course for which Lohman is a grader,
explained the delay in returning student homework by saying that "Michael Lohman is sick."

Michael Litchman, a visiting professor in the psychology department who teaches a course on abnormal psychology, said, "Obviously
has some extremely serious issues regarding interpersonal relationships, self esteem and socially acceptable behaviors in public."
"It may be that he does, indeed, like Asian women and may have been rejected by one or more, and he's angry and hurt. That's one
possibility, but there are many other possibilities," Litchman, a clinical psychologist by training, said, stressing that he has not met with
Lohman and thus cannot make a specific diagnosis.
"It might also go back to something that has happened to him prior to his entry to college, perhaps even during his childhood. At this point
in time, it's difficult to pinpoint with any degree of certainty exactly what happened to this man other than to conclude that he needs intensive
psychotherapy and that he shouldn't be allowed on this campus until such time as he's been successfully treated," he added.
A gifted mathematician

In interviews with the 'Prince, a friend, a neighbor and former professors of Lohman painted a portrait of him as a gifted mathematician and friendly individual.

"I was shocked," a graduate student who knows Lohman said. "I couldn't believe because . . . how can one prove that he really
did that?"
Lohman received his bachelor's degree in mathematics from Louisiana State University (LSU) in 2001 and was awarded a scholarship on
the basis of his academic performance, professorial recommendations and accomplishments in math.
While at LSU, Lohman met his future wife. They were married in the summer of 2001, just after Lohman graduated, the Princeton student
who knows him said. When Lohman moved to Princeton in 2002 after a year of graduate work at LSU, his wife stayed in Louisiana to
finish her doctoral degree.
For the year during which they were separated, Lohman lived in the Graduate College, the Princeton graduate student said. When
Lohman's wife joined him in Princeton, the couple moved to the Butler apartments, which are intended for married couples.
"They seemed happy," the student said. "The relations between he and his wife were excellent."
Meng Ming, a psychology graduate student and neighbor of Lohman's, said, "We spoke a few times. He seemed very normal."
LSU mathematics professor Robert Perlis, who taught Lohman and was on the committee that decided to offer him a scholarship, said he
was "absolutely shocked and almost in disbelief that could do something like this."
Another LSU professor, James Oxley, said that though his interaction with Lohman was confined to the classroom, he "had no reason to
believe anything other than he was a normal student, except very gifted mathematically."
Oxley said he "was really impressed with mathematical ability" - so impressed that he recommended that Lohman go to
Princeton for graduate school. He encouraged Lohman to work with Paul Seymour, a University professor he considered "the best person"
in the field of graph theory.
Perlis added that Oxley "thought Michael would perhaps do better in the Princeton environment" because of the opportunities to work with
some of the strongest minds in applied and computational mathematics.
When Lohman wasn't admitted to Princeton, according to the graduate student who knows him, he stayed at LSU for another year and
reapplied - this time successfully.
"Princeton is the place he really wanted to come," the graduate student who knows him said. "He wants to be a professor, surely, in
academia. He had a lot of progress on his research project, so it's a pity that he cannot continue his work . . . I will be so sorry about it."

Seymour and other members of Princeton's mathematics department declined to comment on Monday, citing a desire to respect Lohman's
privacy.

- Includes reporting by Princetonian Staff Writer Jennifer Epstein.

Comments? Suggestions? Questions? Please contact letters AT dailyprincetonian DOT com.
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